Enamel Flakes

    • 1 posts
    August 24, 2012 5:23 PM EDT

    Hi Cathy.  I think you can put enamel on a sheet of metal, fire it, then break it off by bending the metal.  Since fine silver is cleaner than copper I would try that.  Re use the sheet.  

    M

    • 77 posts
    September 4, 2012 7:17 AM EDT

    You can the chips as follows produce: Sieve a 1 mm thick enamel shift onto a stainless steel and fire it. If the sheet cools down, the enamel shift chips off.  The flake you can crush. Instead of stainless steal you also can use or copper-foil. The disadvantage is, that the enamel flakes sticks onto the foil and  have on the back a thin shift of cinder. If you wrinkle the foil the enamel shift chips off in many small pieces.

    A friend of mine makes from such flakes pictures, which looks like mosaic. He sorted the flakes by color and glues with wall paper glue it piece by piece on a pre-enameled copper sheet and fired it again. A LOT of work, but the effect is very special.

    Edmund

    • 0 posts
    August 13, 2012 12:06 AM EDT

    I have come across some flakes of enamel that I am using in my work. I wonder how they were made. I imagine that lead based enamels were sifted and melted onto a surface that did not fuse to the enamel. The enamel was then scraped off into a pile of small chips (quarter inch or smaller). Is anyone familiar with this technique?